Zack Connors and Rachel Meadows were born with incredible psychokinetic capabilities. When word of their supernatural talents gets out, they find themselves the prisoners of Michael Slovak, a deranged doctor intent on harvesting their powers.

After a daring escape, they are free from his sinister institution, but the corrupt doctor will seemingly stop at nothing to track them down so that he may continue to siphon their gifts for his own use…

Review:

Joe Begos’ Almost Human was uneven yet hugely enjoyable in a trashy way. Unfortunately, The Mind’s Eye feels like rehashed themes from Scanners,bogged down by weak acting and too many police procedural scenes that offer little to draw the viewer in. Only Steve Moore’s synth score and the truly impressive special effects stand out. Sadly, it’s a wasted opportunity, overall.

Adrian J Smith, HORRORPEDIA

Other reviews:

“The Mind’s Eye is a B picture through and through and unashamedly so. It grows perpetually sillier as it progresses along. The third act erupts in a full-on display of hilariously gargantuan acting and buckets of bloody fireworks that satisfies in spades. Begos successfully captures the unpretentious absurdity that the genre’s less respected but much-loved (by hardcore fans) gems possessed. ” Mike Pereira, Bloody Disgusting

” … a horror film so infatuated with the style of ’80s straight-to-vid fare that unwitting viewers could have mistaken it for something rediscovered from that era … this one works so hard at its ultra-grave air of menace that it eventually turns (intentionally, one hopes) comic, building to third-act violence that will leave the right kind of audience howling with delight.” John DeFore, The Hollywood Reporter

“While always gratuitous and often kooky, what makes the insanity in Begos’ film work well is that is also never feels pointless. The Mind’s Eye may not carry the metaphorical weight of Scanners, but the story is engaging enough and Begos channels his influences from the most genuine place of admiration. He is clearly a director who adores the subgenres to which he is paying homage and his approach is gleeful, but reverent…” Ari Drew, Dread Central

” … while exploding heads are the money shots there’s plenty of non-cranial bodily damage too. Color shifts throughout the film as scenes are lit it in primary hues, and Steve Moore’s score also stands out with a propulsive electronic beat and a powerful use of bass. The Mind’s Eye is an unabashed homage that plays like Cronenberg’s Scanners meets John Carpenter’s synthesizer meets Dario Argento’s lighting designer. There’s wet fun to be had here, but it ultimately leaves little room for Begos.” Rob Hunter, Film School Rejects

“The practical effects, coordinated by John Ruggieri, are resolutely old-school, a feast of head-splitting (and head-rolling) gore and squishy detonations of flesh. The make-up, too, is a Fangoria pictorial of popping veins, infected pustules, and evolving facial decay. Begos spends much of the film raising the stakes for the climactic battle between Zack and Dr. Slovak, and he succeeds at a minimum in scaling up the physical and psychic power of their confrontation.” Scott Tobias, Variety

“Writer/director Joe Begos and his compatriots have grown as filmmakers since their debut feature Almost Human. The pacing is better, the storytelling is stronger and The Mind’s Eye is overall more fun—and much gorier. In fact, Brian Spears and Peter Gerner’s makeup creations are the highlight of the movie, which is a wild splatterfest of head explosions and bulging veins.” Fangoria

“For those eager for gore, it’s an absolute blast watching Zack and Rachel throw furniture, pop heads and split people in two, but the movie doesn’t have the character development, story or performances to make the gross-out moments anything more than fleeting thrills.” Perri Nemiroff, Collider

Release:

In the UK, the film was released on DVD by High Fliers as Supernatural Forces on 6 February 2017.